In May 1910 Mildred Williams, a young teacher in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, made headlines across Western Canada for her pluck and stamina as she waited for twelve days and nights on a chair on the stairs outside the door of the land office in Saskatoon to claim a homestead (see Fig. 1). She was determined to file on a half-section (320 acres) of valuable land near Kindersley. Williams put up with a great deal of inconvenience during her days and nights on the stairs. On the second day she was challenged by a man who wanted the same property and who tried to push her off her chair, but her numerous supporters rushed to her assistance and came near throwing him down the stairs. Her vigil was worth the wait: she successfully filed on land tha...
In June of 1916, Sidney Brook left for war, leaving his thirty-year-old pregnant wife Isabelle Brook...
On May 20, 1862 Congress signed into effect the Homestead Act which provided 160 acres of surveyed g...
Canada is widely regarded as a liberal, multicultural nation that prides itself on a history of pea...
In May 1910 Mildred Williams, a young teacher in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, made headlines across West...
In 1870 on the southeastern Nebraska prairie near Beatrice, a young Bohemian woman, Ann Schleiss, se...
In 1884 Mary E. Inderwick wrote to her Ontario family from the ranch near Pincher Creek, Alberta, wh...
Women as well as men took advantage of government land policies that encouraged settlement on the Gr...
Since the republication of Letters of a Woman Homesteader in 1982, Elinore Pruitt Stewart\u27s descr...
This Virtual Exhibition features one of the millions of small stories of homesteading in the US West...
Six Nations women transformed and maintained power in the Grand River community in the early twentie...
On March 19, 1918, the government of Canada announced a new, nationwide agricultural policy called t...
Student Paper - The Role Played by Women's Institutes in Western Canada by Louise Showman (Toffelmre...
This study explores the relationship between federal land policy and women’s property rights in the ...
At the beginning of Saskatchewan’s homesteading period, from 1880 to 1910, the Homesteading Hero Myt...
S ettlement of the West-by common understanding-has meant the taking up of the public domain, espec...
In June of 1916, Sidney Brook left for war, leaving his thirty-year-old pregnant wife Isabelle Brook...
On May 20, 1862 Congress signed into effect the Homestead Act which provided 160 acres of surveyed g...
Canada is widely regarded as a liberal, multicultural nation that prides itself on a history of pea...
In May 1910 Mildred Williams, a young teacher in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, made headlines across West...
In 1870 on the southeastern Nebraska prairie near Beatrice, a young Bohemian woman, Ann Schleiss, se...
In 1884 Mary E. Inderwick wrote to her Ontario family from the ranch near Pincher Creek, Alberta, wh...
Women as well as men took advantage of government land policies that encouraged settlement on the Gr...
Since the republication of Letters of a Woman Homesteader in 1982, Elinore Pruitt Stewart\u27s descr...
This Virtual Exhibition features one of the millions of small stories of homesteading in the US West...
Six Nations women transformed and maintained power in the Grand River community in the early twentie...
On March 19, 1918, the government of Canada announced a new, nationwide agricultural policy called t...
Student Paper - The Role Played by Women's Institutes in Western Canada by Louise Showman (Toffelmre...
This study explores the relationship between federal land policy and women’s property rights in the ...
At the beginning of Saskatchewan’s homesteading period, from 1880 to 1910, the Homesteading Hero Myt...
S ettlement of the West-by common understanding-has meant the taking up of the public domain, espec...
In June of 1916, Sidney Brook left for war, leaving his thirty-year-old pregnant wife Isabelle Brook...
On May 20, 1862 Congress signed into effect the Homestead Act which provided 160 acres of surveyed g...
Canada is widely regarded as a liberal, multicultural nation that prides itself on a history of pea...